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US Chief Negotiator On Surprise North Korea Visit

US negotiator Christopher Hill.

Problem of frozen NKorean funds over: Russia
Moscow (AFP) June 21 - Russia's deputy foreign minister said Thursday that problems surrounding the transfer of funds to North Korea frozen by the United States had been resolved and the transfer was under way. "These funds are being transferred even as we speak," Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Kislyak said. "All necessary agreements have been reached. All guarantees have been received. I think we can assume already that this question is closed," Kislyak told journalists. Earlier on Thursday a North Korean diplomat in Vienna said questions still remained about the transfer of the money, which is being handled by Russia. The spokesman at the North Korean embassy in Vienna, Hyon Yong Man, had said a visit by UN nuclear inspectors to North Korea scheduled for next week was in doubt because of a delay in the release of the funds to the republic. The dispute concerns millions of dollars in North Korean funds that were frozen at Macau's Banco Delta Asia (BDA) in 2005 under US sanctions. Russia stepped in to help overcome the problem in order to try to get negotiations over the North Korean nuclear stand-off back on track. But Moscow had worries that it might become a target of US sanctions for helping solving the problem and wanted those worries alleviated. On Monday Russian and North Korean officials said the funds had been transferred to the Russian central bank and would be transferred on to a bank in the far east of Russia where North Korean has an account.
by Simon Martin
Seoul (AFP) Jun 21, 2007
US negotiator Christopher Hill flew to North Korea Thursday to push for swift progress on nuclear disarmament, though a Pyongyang official hinted a planned visit by a UN watchdog may be delayed. Hill's mission at Pyongyang's invitation is the highest-level US visit for nearly five years and follows an apparent breakthrough in implementing a February deal to scrap the communist nation's nuclear programmes.

The US State Department said Hill would seize the opportunity to insist on the need for North Korea to fulfil its part of the February deal and to discuss ways of moving forward.

"We are serious about trying to move the process forward, to testing the proposition that North Korea has made that strategic decision to dismantle its nuclear program. So, we'll see how the process proceeds," said State Department spokesman Sean McCormack in Washington.

An International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) delegation plans to visit Pyongyang next week to discuss procedures for shutting down the North's Yongbyon reactor, which produces the raw material for bomb-making plutonium.

But a North Korean official in Vienna, where the UN nuclear watchdog is based, said his country had not yet given the formal go-ahead for the visit.

"The visit date of the delegation is not confirmed because the release of the frozen funds of DPRK (North Korea) at Banco Delta Asia in Macau has not been completed," embassy spokesman Hyon Yong-Man told reporters.

"Our side already informed the IAEA that we have no objections for the agency to prepare the visit as planned, but we are not ready to give our official confirmation for the scheduled visit of the agency due to the only reason of unfinished remittance."

Russia's deputy foreign minister Sergei Kislyak confirmed Thursday that problems surrounding the transfer had been resolved. "I think we can assume already that this question is closed."

Arriving at Pyongyang airport, Hill said his aim was to get the six-party talks process moving. The forum grouping the two Koreas, China, Russia, Japan and the United States reached a disarmament deal on February 13 but the cash row blocked any progress.

"We hope we can make up for some time we lost this spring," he said after being greeted by a smiling Ri Gun, director of the foreign ministry's America bureau.

China said its Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi would visit Pyongyang on July 2-4, with nuclear disarmament on the agenda. It described Hill's visit as positive.

"We hope it will be conducive to implementing the initial actions (of the February accord) and be of benefit to improving relations between North Korea and the US," said foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang.

Choson Sinbo, a pro-North Korean newspaper published in Tokyo which often reflects official thinking, said the disarmament process may now speed up "if the US and the DPRK (North Korea) continue to build up mutual trust."

South Korea's foreign ministry said Hill would meet counterpart Kim Kye-Gwan, who extended the invitation, and vice foreign minister Kang Sok-Ju, who is close to reclusive leader Kim Jong-Il.

The US State Department said Hill would leave Friday. He was to return to South Korea and go on to Tokyo on his way home.

In the February deal, the North agreed to disable its nuclear programmes in exchange for major aid and diplomatic benefits, including a possible normalisation of relations with Washington.

The pact followed a surge in tensions after the North carried out its first nuclear weapons test last October.

Four IAEA officials arrived in South Korea Thursday to discuss the mission scheduled for next week. A follow-up team will be sent to North Korea within weeks to verify the actual shutdown if it goes ahead.

It will be the inspectors' first visit since they were kicked out in late 2002. Hill's trip is the first to North Korea by a top State Department official since October 2002, when his predecessor James Kelly confronted the North with alleged evidence of a secret nuclear programme using highly enriched uranium.

That accusation, and the North's denial, triggered off the latest nuclear crisis and the collapse of a 1994 bilateral denuclearisation accord.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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US Says North Korea Disarmament Back On Track
Tokyo (AFP) June 20, 2007
The chief US negotiator on North Korea said Wednesday the nuclear disarmament process was back on track, with UN inspectors set to return after more than four years and talks likely to resume within weeks. North Korea had refused to implement a breakthrough February deal to shut its nuclear reactor due to a long-running feud over its assets frozen in the Chinese territory of Macau.







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